Some stories stop you cold because they remind you just how fragile life really is.
Tatiana Schlossberg, the granddaughter of President John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, has died at the age of 35 after a year and a half battle with acute myeloid leukemia. Her family confirmed the heartbreaking news in a statement shared through the JFK Library Foundation, writing simply and painfully, “Our beautiful Tatiana passed away this morning. She will always be in our hearts.” For a family whose name is forever woven into American history, the loss is deeply personal and devastating.
Born and raised in New York City, Tatiana was the daughter of Caroline Kennedy and Ed Schlossberg, and from an early age, she forged her own path rather than leaning on the weight of her last name. She was thoughtful, sharp, and fiercely curious, earning a bachelor’s degree in history from Yale University before continuing her studies at the University of Oxford, where she completed a master’s degree in American history. Education was never about prestige for her. It was about understanding the world and finding ways to protect it.
Tatiana became an environmental journalist and author, dedicating her career to climate change, conservation, and the responsibility humans have to the planet. Her writing reflected both urgency and empathy, and she had been preparing to begin a new research project focused on ocean conservation before her illness took over her life. She believed words mattered, and she used hers to challenge people to care more deeply about the earth they inhabit.
In May 2024, Tatiana was diagnosed with a rare mutation of acute myeloid leukemia, discovered while she was hospitalized after giving birth to her second child. In a powerful and heartbreaking essay published in The New Yorker in November 2025, she shared her experience with brutal honesty. Doctors noticed that her white blood cell count looked wrong, and soon her life was overtaken by hospital rooms, transplants, and clinical trials.
She wrote about being told she might have a year to live and how her first thought was not fear for herself but fear for her children. She worried her son might only remember fragments of her, and that her daughter might not remember her at all. She described missing nearly half of her baby girl’s first year because of the risk of infection, unable to do the most basic acts of motherhood, like changing a diaper or giving her a bath. Her words cut straight to the bone, especially for parents who know how quickly those moments pass.
Despite her illness, Tatiana never stopped trying to live fully in the present. She wrote about clinging to small memories, watching her children grow while reflecting on her own childhood, and pretending she would remember it all forever, even knowing she would not. It was a quiet kind of bravery that does not shout but lingers.
Her death adds another chapter to the long history of loss carried by the Kennedy family. Caroline Kennedy was just days away from her sixth birthday when her father was assassinated. She later lost her brother, John F. Kennedy Jr., in a plane crash in 1999. Now she mourns the loss of her daughter, a pain no parent should have to endure.
Tatiana is survived by her husband, George Moran, whom she married in 2017, their young son and daughter, her parents, and her siblings Rose and Jack. Tributes have poured in remembering her as brilliant, funny, compassionate, and strong. Journalist and family member Maria Shriver described her as “valiant, courageous, and full of light,” praising both her intellect and her heart.
Tatiana Schlossberg lived a life defined not by a famous name, but by purpose, love, and honesty. Her story is a reminder that legacy is not measured by power or politics, but by the lives we touch and the truth we leave behind.


















